In North America, Mycoplasma bovis is the most pathogenic mycoplasma found in cattle. The main diseases associated with it (respiratory disease, mastitis, septic arthritis and otitis median and/or internal) are a challenge to the dairy industry because of the difficulty to treat them and to prevent them by vaccination.
The principal objective of this project was to study nasal shedding and serological response to M. bovis in replacement heifers, between birth and 7 months of age, in four dairy herds in Quebec.
Eighty three pairs cow/heifer in 4 cohorts of dairy cattle were sampled monthly (heifers: 0 to 7 months; cows: 0, 1 and 5 months after calving). Nasal swabs and milk samples were analyzed by bacteriological culture and by indirect immunofluorescence. Circulating antibodies were detected by ELISA test.
At birth, the serologic prevalence of heifers was significantly higher than the serologic prevalence of cows (P = 0,01). Transmission of M. bovis to heifers in milk and nasal shedding from cows was low. The average age (days) of a heifer for first nasal shedding and first seroconversion to M. bovis was far from the neonatal period: 77,5 ± 11,2 days (n = 22) and 96,8 ± 7,4 days (n = 36) respectively.
Conclusion, cows were only a minor route of transmission of M. bovis to heifers, the main route of transmission was most likely the direct or indirect contact with other heifers shedding M. bovis in their upper respiratory tract.